2. •BANANA
•Botanical name: Musa spp. Family:
Musaceae
•‗Apple of Paradise‘ and Tree of wisdom
•Importance: Every part of the plant has a
ready use.
•The banana species Musa textiles is well
known for their strong fibre
3. •Orign-south east asia
•Berry fruit
•Spadix inflorescence
•Mostly seen in high rainfall area
•Day neautral plant
•Biological plate– leaf of banana
5. •Nutritional Value:
•a) Banana is a good source of vitamin A and a fair
source of VitaminCand B2
•b) Banana fruits are rich source of minerals like
magnesium, sodium, potassium and phosphorous
and fair source of calcium and iron.
•Banana is the second largest produced fruit after
mango in India accounting for 21.87 per cent of the
total fruit production from 10.49 per cent of the
area.
6. •Table varieties -Poovan, dwarf Cavendish,
Robusta, Grand nine, Rasthali,Grosmichel,
Virupakshi, Nendran,Monthan.
•Culinary varieties: Monthan. There are
also other varieties like Yenugu bontha
and boodidha bontha belonging to this
group.
•Hill Bananas: Virupakhi (Syn: Sirumalai,
and Mala Vazhai.)
7. •Climate:
•temperature range of 10-40OC and an average of
23OC
•Low temperature i.e. less than 10OC is unsuitable
since, they lead to a condition called choke or
impeded inflorescence and bunch development
•Propagation: Banana is propagated vegetaively
through suckers and rhizomes.
•Suckers: There are two types of suckers. 1) Water
sucker 2) Sword sucker
8. •Water sucker: Have broad leaves and broad
pseudostem and they don‘t produce a healthy
banana clump and hence not suitable for
planting.
•Sword sucker: It has a strong large base,
gradually tapering to a slender point with one
or two narrow sword like leaves at the tip. The
sword sucker is most vigorous, grows fast and
comes in to bearing early. Hence, sword
suckers are preferred for planting.
9. •Selection of sucker: Select only 3-4 months old
suckers from healthy vigorously growing and good
yielding plants. The sword suckers should have 4-5‖
diameter at the base and 2-3 kg weight
•Rhizomes: After harvest, a number of its suckers
are encouraged to grow up to 1-2 feet. They are
then dug out and their pseudostems are completely
cut above the solid rhizome and roots removed.
The rhizomes weighing about 450-900 grams are
stored for two months in a dry place under shade
10. •Land preparation: The land should be
deeply ploughed, harrowed and
leveled and pits of 45cmx45cmx45cm
should be dug at the required spacing
•While filling the pits with the
manured soil apply to the pit 50
grams of lindane dust to control
weevil
11.
12. • Cultural operations in Banana
• Desuckering: During the growth of the mother plant, the suckers arise
from its rhizomes from time to time. If all these suckers are allowed to
grow, the mother plant looses its vigour
• Therefore the suckers should not be allowed to grow near the parent
plant till the mother plant commences flowering
• At flowering (six months after planting), a vigorous growing sword
sucker should be allowed to grow and one more sucker is encouraged
to shoot out from the soil when the parent plant matures its fruits.
Thus the parent plant has completed its life, it has only two suckers.
• When the mother plant is harvested and removed, the first sucker
which is 6 months old takes the lead and becomes the mother plant in
the next generation
13. •Trashing: It is the removal of undesirable material from
the banana field like dried, diseased and decayed leaves,
pseudo stem after harvest, male bud, last end of
inflorescence and withered floral parts.
•Mattocking: After harvest of the bunch, the plant stem
should be cut in stages at least after 30-45 days to
facilitate mobilization of the nutrients from the mother
to the developing ratoon plant.
•The pseudo stem should be cut leaving a stump of about
0.6m height.
14. •Wrapping of bunches: It is covering of bunches with polythene
or gunny cloth that protects the fruits from intense heat, hot
wind etc. and improves the colour of the fruits.
•Tipping: It is the removal of heart or male bud. The large heart
shaped flower bud, contains infertile male flowers in reddish
scale leaves
•after the fertile flowers have developed and formed in to a
bunch. It should be cut soon other wise it is likely to use up
some of the food, which would otherwise go to the
development of fruits.
•It is a practice recommended for improving the appearance of
the bunch as well as to ward off fingertip‘ disease
15. •Removal of floral remnants: The removal of dried
and persistent floral remnants present at the apex
of the fruit or finger helps in preventing the spread
of fungal diseases.
•Propping: It is a method by which support is given
to banana bearing plants with the help of bamboo,
casuarinas or eucalyptus poles
•Earthing up: It should be done during the rainy
season to provide drainage and to avoid water
logging at the base
16. •Nutrient sprays: Spraying of a
mixture containing 2% urea and
potassium Dihydrogen phosphate
immediately after the emergence of
inflorescence stalk helps in increasing
the size of the bunch and fruit
content.
17. •Banana fruits develop parthenocarpically.
•Banana comes to flowering in about 9 months after planting.
•The dwarf bananas are ready for harvest with in 11-14 months
after planting, while tall cultivars take about 14-16 months to
harvest.
•The fruits become ready in 3-4 months after flowering.
•Dwarf Cavendish variety takes about 11 months, Robusta 12
months and poovan about 13 months from planting to
harvesting.
•Banana is categorized as climacteric fruit. Fruits don‘t ripe early
and uniformly on the plant.
18. •maturity standards
•The physical characters like colour, shape, size and
the ratio between consumable to non-consumable
portions are taken in to consideration.
19. •For export purpose, three fourths of the full maturity stage
(recognized by the sharp angularities of the fingers) is
considered to harvest.
•At this stage, the dwarf Cavendish shows a pulp-skin ratio of
35:1 or 40:1.
Maha banana
1st jan 2002 established by directorate agricultural marketing +
maharastra agricultural marketing
Head quarter - jalgaon
•Yield
•Tall cultivars usually yield 15-20 tonnes /ha. Dwarf varieties are
30-40 tonnes per hectare.
20. Post harvest
•13-15 0c 90% humidity
•14.5 kg ventilated CFB box
•Can be stored 6 weeks in controlled
condition ( no ethylene )